Buttonwood

Action replay

Was the script for the recent turmoil written in 1998, 1990, or is it new?

LIKE generals condemned to fight the last war, investors seem fated to hark back to the last financial crisis. When markets plunged on “Black Monday” in October 1987, people feared a repeat of the Wall Street crash of 1929. Central banks cut interest rates in part because they wanted to avoid a re-run of the 1930s' depression.

But the world has suffered a lot of financial crises and it is not always clear which one to use as a benchmark. Take the central banks' responses to the recent problems in the credit markets. Do they suggest that we are looking at a repeat of 1998, when Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund, wobbled, or at 1990, when there was a financial crisis at savings-and-loans banks, then the main providers of American mortgages?

As David Bowers of Absolute Strategy Research points out, it makes an enormous difference which crisis (if either) is being replayed. In 1998 rate cuts quickly restored the animal spirits of investors and the dotcom bubble followed. If that pattern is to be repeated, investors should be piling into growth-sensitive sectors like emerging markets and commodities.

But in 1990 several rate cuts failed to stop the American economy from sliding into recession. That may be what happens once again now, especially as most observers believe it takes 12-18 months for changes in interest rates to have much economic effect. Figures released on September 25th showed that the inventory of unsold American homes is at its highest level since 1989. If we are following the 1990 script, then investors should be opting for the safety of Treasury bonds.

The strength of the world's stockmarkets since the Federal Reserve cut rates on September 18th indicates that most investors are, to misquote Prince, “partying like it's 1998”. The MSCI emerging-markets index reached a record high on September 24th, and the best-performing industries in share-price terms over the past month have been economically sensitive ones, such as mining and chemicals.

Ajay Kapur of the hedge fund First Horse Capital says that America's stockmarket normally returns 7.2% over the six months after the first rate cut in the cycle, even in periods when the economy is slipping into recession. When a downturn is avoided, the average six-monthly gain is 20.1%. Mr Kapur says the world is dominated by “fiat currency democracies” in which governments and central banks tend to give in to popular pressure and “print money” to avoid hard times. He believes the recent actions of the Fed, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England endorse his view.

Those bears who believe the drama is more likely to resemble 1990 than 1998 base their case on what they think are excessive levels of consumer debt. Clearly, many of them were far too early in predicting a debt-driven crisis; Peter Warburton's jeremiad “Debt and Delusion”, for example, was published back in 1999.

But they have a point now. As economies become more sophisticated, it may make sense for consumers to take on more debt as a means of smoothing their consumption over their lifetimes. Indeed, this should add to economic stability. Ironically, however, greater stability only encourages consumers to take on more debt since they are less fearful of losing their jobs in recessions.

Consumer debt cannot keep growing faster than income forever. That evil day has been delayed, over the past 20 years, by the downward trend in interest rates. But the bears think the crunch has now arrived, as it did in Japan in the 1990s.

The world may not have to wait too long to see whether they are right. As David Rosenberg, an economist at Merrill Lynch, recalls, the stockmarket rallied in response to a half-percentage-point rate cut in early January 2001. But by the time the Fed lowered rates again at the end of that month, its move was seen by investors as a sign of desperation.

Three months ago Buttonwood pointed to three portents that would suggest investors should prepare for the worst. One of those, higher credit spreads, has indeed appeared. Another was a resurgence of inflation. Although that looks unlikely in the short term, especially if economies weaken, the long-term chances of higher inflation must surely have gone up. Gold is at its highest level since it last peaked in 1980.

The final sign was a burst of yen strength (which would indicate an unwinding of speculative bets). The yen has risen against the dollar since June but there has been no sharp lurch higher; perhaps because the Japanese economy is itself weak. But if the gloomsters are to be proven right, we must surely see some turmoil in the currency markets first.